Men And Women Are Now Both Being Judged For Hooking Up Too Much

College students judge men and women's sexual behavior by a much
more equal standard than in the past, but they still frown upon
anyone who gets busy "too much," new research finds.

A survey of more than 19,000 college students finds that about
half lose respect for people who have sex with "lots of people."
Only a minority of students
judged the genders differently based on the amount of sex
they had.

"Men and women are increasingly judging each other on the same
level playing field," study researcher Rachel Alison, a doctoral
candidate at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said in a
statement. "But gender equality and sexual liberation are not
synonymous."

The data came from the 2011 Online College Social Life Survey,
which pools survey responses from 22 colleges. Respondents were
asked whether they agreed with the statement, "If women hook
up or have sex with lots of people, I respect them less."
They were also asked the same question about men. [10
Surprising Sex Statistics]

While 48 percent of students judged men and women's sexual
exploits equally, 12 percent held a double standard, judging
women more harshly than men. Another 13 percent held a backward
double standard, judging men more harshly than women. Finally, 27
percent said they didn't judge people for hooking up at all, no
matter how frequently.

Women were more likely than men to judge but to do so equally, an
attitude the researchers called "egalitarian conservative." About
54 percent of women surveyed were egalitarian conservatives
compared with 35 percent of men. Only 6 percent of women
judged women more harshly for hooking up, compared with 25
percent of men who reported the same.

Male athletes and members of fraternities were more likely than
other men to hold a double standard, judging women for their
sexual encounters and letting men off the hook. Sorority sisters
living in Greek housing were more likely to hold a reverse double
standard than other women, judging men harshly for hooking up.

It's possible that the Greek culture of judgment from men foments
this gender war, the researchers suggest.

"Women who hold to this reverse double standard are invoking a
kind of gender justice," study researcher Barbara Risman, a
professor of sociology at the University of Illinois at Chicago,
said in a statement. "They are critical of men who treat women
badly, and they do not accept a 'boys will be boys' view of male
sexuality."

Rounding out the demographic data, the researchers found that
Buddhists, Jewish and non-religious students were less likely
than Catholics to judge people negatively for their sexual
hook-ups. Evangelical or fundamentalists Christian women were 76
percent more likely than Catholic women to judge others'
hook-ups.

Non-heterosexual students were less likely than heterosexual
students to judge people negatively for having casual sex, as were
students on the West Coast. Midwestern students were the most
judgmental, with East Coasters falling in between.

The researchers will report their findings Monday, Aug. 20 at the
American Sociological Associations annual meeting in Denver.